Adrien Petersen v. Robert K. Mccormic, Jr

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedJuly 9, 2019
Docket51357-9
StatusUnpublished

This text of Adrien Petersen v. Robert K. Mccormic, Jr (Adrien Petersen v. Robert K. Mccormic, Jr) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Washington primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Adrien Petersen v. Robert K. Mccormic, Jr, (Wash. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

Filed Washington State Court of Appeals Division Two

July 9, 2019 IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

DIVISION II ADRIEN PETERSEN, No. 51357-9-II

Respondent,

v.

ROBERT K. McCORMIC, JR., a married man UNPUBLISHED OPINION as his separate estate, as to defenses to Plaintiff’s complaint to quiet title and First Counterclaim (Quiet Title),

Appellant, And

WILLIAM OMAITS, a single man, as the successor in interest to ROBERT K. McCORMIC, JR., as to Counterclaims 2, 3 and 4 (Trespass, Ejectment and Waste or Injury to Land,

Counterclaim Defendant.

GLASGOW, J. — Robert McCormic owned two residential lots of waterfront property.

Adjacent to McCormic’s two lots was another piece of land called the Portway. McCormic

adversely possessed and then obtained title to the north half of the Portway, adding to his

property waterfront footage that was equal to each of his other two lots.

McCormic obtained a loan, borrowing against his original two residential lots. While the

lender was aware of McCormic’s claim of ownership of the north half of the Portway, the

lender’s deed of trust did not describe the additional Portway property in its legal description of

the property encumbered by the loan. Some years later, McCormic received and recorded a

quitclaim deed that conveyed to him title to the north half of the Portway. McCormic eventually No. 51357-9-II

defaulted on his loan, and a trustee instituted a nonjudicial foreclosure against the original two

residential lots. Adrien Petersen bought the two residential lots at the trustee’s sale.

A dispute then arose about whether the north half of the Portway should have been

included in the trustee’s deed that conveyed to Petersen the residential lots. The trustee’s deed

did not include or otherwise describe the adjacent Portway land in the legal description. The trial

court granted summary judgment and quieted title in Petersen’s favor. McCormic appeals.

McCormic contends that a trustee can convey title only to property described in a deed of

trust and, therefore, title to the north half of the Portway was not conveyed to Petersen. Petersen

argues that we should apply the after-acquired property doctrine to reform his deed to include the

north half of the Portway. Alternatively, Petersen argues that the omission of the north half of

the Portway was a scrivener’s error, that a mutual mistake supports reformation of the deed, or

judicial estoppel precludes McCormic from claiming ownership of the disputed land.

We agree with McCormic that the trustee conveyed to Petersen only the land described in

the deed of trust, and none of Petersen’s arguments warrant reformation of the deed. We

therefore reverse and remand for the trial court to enter summary judgment in McCormic’s favor.

Although McCormic also asks that we quiet title in his favor, we leave that request for the trial

court to resolve on remand.

FACTS

In 1974, McCormic bought a residential property consisting of two lots—Lot 1 and Lot

2—in the Port Madison community of Bainbridge Island. Adjacent to Lots 1 and 2 was another

piece of land called the Portway. The Portway was a 100 foot wide parcel of platted real

property on the south shore of Port Madison Bay. Historically, the Portway was an avenue likely

2 No. 51357-9-II

used for public access to the bay. For many years, McCormic landscaped, mowed, and

maintained the north half of the Portway.

In 1994, McCormic planted three pine trees on the northern 50 feet of the Portway. In

addition, McCormic obtained a commitment for title insurance that documented McCormic’s

purported fee ownership of the north 50 feet of the Portway and included a legal description of

the property. Lots 1 and 2 totaled 100 frontage feet of waterfront, and the north half of the

Portway totaled an additional 50 frontage feet of waterfront. So, the north half of the Portway

amounted to about equal water frontage as each of the other two lots.

In 1995, the City of Bainbridge Island commissioned a survey of the Portway that was

recorded with the Kitsap County Auditor in August 1996. The survey notes that McCormic’s

title insurance policy “vests ownership to adjoiners [the McCormics].” Clerk’s Papers (CP) at

630.

In 2004, McCormic sued his uphill neighbors for timber trespass, outrage, and intentional

infliction of emotional distress, alleging that they entered his part of the Portway and cut down

the three pine trees he had planted in 1994. The complaint alleged that the “McCormics are the

legal owners of . . . [t]he north 50 feet of a 100 foot waterfront Lot known as Portway which Lot

is located immediately to the south of their home.” CP at 320. The complaint also alleged that

“[t]he Port Madison Company is the legal owner of the South 50 feet of the Portway.” CP at

320.

In a declaration filed in the timber trespass case, the President of the Port Madison Water

Company, a homeowners association for the Port Madison community, stated that the Port

Madison community was the legal owner of the south 50 feet of the Portway, and the Port

3 No. 51357-9-II

Madison Company did not dispute McCormic’s claim that he owned the north half of the

Portway. The jury in that case returned a verdict in McCormic’s favor.

Later that year, McCormic looked into obtaining a loan from Quality Express Mortgage,

which then commissioned an appraisal of his property. This appraisal noted that “[t]he subject

enjoys 150 F[rontage] F[eet] of medium to low bank waterfront located in the prestigious

neighborhood of Port Madison.” CP at 416. The appraiser combined McCormic’s portion of the

Portway with Lots 1 and 2 when valuing his property at $2.4 million.

McCormic also looked into obtaining a loan from another lender, MortgageIT, which also

commissioned an appraisal of his property. That appraisal valued McCormic’s property at $1.9

million. The appraiser similarly noted that “[p]er Land Title Company of Kitsap County, the

subject site also includes an additional .06 acre and 50 frontage feet of the adjoining vacated

street. The appraisal has been written to include this additional area.” CP at 444.

In 2006, McCormic borrowed $1.33 million from MortgageIT, which it secured with a

deed of trust against his property. The deed of trust included Lots 1 and 2 in its legal description

of the property, but it did not include or describe any portion of the Portway.

In 2013, William Omaits, obtained two judgments against McCormic. As part of the

associated collection action, Omaits obtained a copy of a 1994 insurance policy McCormic

obtained for the Portway.

In 2014, McCormic visited the Kitsap County Assessor’s Office to inquire why the

county had not taxed him separately for his ownership of the north half of the Portway. He

provided the assessor with a copy of his 1994 title insurance policy. Based on that policy, the

assessor added the description of the 50 foot strip of property to the tax description of the

4 No. 51357-9-II

adjoining property. Later that year, Port Madison Water Company executed a quitclaim deed,

for the sole purpose of clearing title, which conveyed to McCormic, as his separate property, title

to the north 50 feet of the Portway. In return, McCormic executed a quitclaim deed that

conveyed to Port Madison Water Company title to the south 50 feet of the Portway.

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